Redstone Old Fort

Redstone Old Fort — written as Redstone or Red-Stone Fort [1] or (for a short time when built) Fort Burd[1] — on the Nemacolin Trail, was the name of the French and Indian War-era wooden fort built in 1759 by Pennsylvania militia colonel James Burd to guard the ancient Indian trail's river ford on a mound overlooking the eastern shore of the Monongahela River (colloquially, just "the Mon") in what is now Fayette County, Pennsylvania, near, or (more likely) on the banks of Dunlap's Creek at the confluence. The site is unlikely to be the same as an earlier fort the French document as Hangard dated to 1754 and which was confusedly, likely located on the nearby stream called Redstone Creek.[notes 1] Red sandstones predominate the deposited rock column of the entire region.

  1. ^ a b Thomas Lynch Montgomery, ed. (1916). "Fort Burd—Redstone Old Fort". Report By the Commission to Locate the Site of the Frontier Forts of Pennsylvania. W.S. Ray. p. 382. Retrieved 2010-11-29.


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